Heatwaves, wildfires, air chaos and overcrowding. How this year’s summer vacations fell apart

Mandatory Credit: Photo by Bav Media/Shutterstock (14075741aj)The queue the length of the airport at Stansted Airport on Monday afternoon after the problems with air traffic control.Passengers have been told to expect "significant delays" as air traffic controllers across the UK are experiencing a technical fault.One airline reported a "network-wide failure" but NATS, the national air traffic controllers, said UK airspace was not closed but restrictions were in place. Stansted Airport delays, UK - 28 Aug 2023
An air traffic control meltdown in the UK in August led to flight delays and cancellations all over Europe. Bav Media/Shutterstock
 

From the litany of bad headlines surrounding the world of travel, you could be forgiven thinking it’s been the summer from hell for vacationers.

Environmental disasters, aviation industry mishaps and strikes, dirty beaches, soaring temperatures, deluges, price hikes and overcrowding all seem to have conspired to ruin getaways for hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of people this year.

But, for many people, a summer break is a much-needed annual highlight that offers respite from the stresses not just of everyday life, but other often extreme hardships.

Of course, huge numbers of lucky people enjoyed trouble-free vacations around the world. For every angry thread of tweets from airport departure lounges, there were likely many more smiling poolside selfies.

It’s the bad news that travels furthest. Here’s a roundup of some of the adversity that vacationers have faced over the past few months:

Relentless heat

Phoenix in the US endured a record-breaking 31 consecutive days of 110F-plus (43C) temperatures.
This summer has been declared the planet’s hottest for years. Matt York/AP

Not everyone wants warm, sunny vacations but even sunseekers would’ve had more than they wished for in early summer, with July 2023 declared by NASA as the Earth’s hottest month since records began in 1880.

It didn’t stop there. This summerwas later declared the planet’s hottest for years, breaking previous records by a significant margin.

Southern Europe sizzled as several fierce heatwaves sent temperatures soaring to near all-time highs, making life uncomfortable and even dangerous for tourists and locals alike.

In Italy, red alert heat warnings were issued alongside guidance for tourists and locals about staying hydrated and seeking out shade and aircon. In Athens, authorities closed key tourist sites including the Acropolis during the hottest part of the day.

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ATHENS, GREECE - JULY 20: Tourists refresh with water in front of the five century BC Parthenon temple at the Acropolis hill during a heat wave on July 20, 2023 in Athens, Greece. The Acropolis of Athens and other archaeological sites in Greece announced reduced opening hours due to the heatwave conditions. Parts of Europe continue to experience extreme conditions of the Cerberus heatwave, dubbed Charon. (Photo by Milos Bicanski/Getty Images)
Greece’s Acropolis was closed during the hottest part of the day as temperatures rose during the summer. Milos Bicanski/Getty Images

As the heat built, there were already predictions of shifting tourist patterns with one study suggesting tourists planning trips to the Mediterranean region had dropped by 10% year on year, while interest was increasing in cooler climes like Ireland and Denmark. UK travel company Thomas Cook and travel agent association ABTA both told CNN they had seen no discernible difference in July.

Meanwhile, the extreme weather kept coming.

Hailstones of up to 10 centimeters, or nearly four inches, hit northern Italy’s Veneto region. Phoenix in the US endured a record-breaking 31 consecutive days of 110F-plus (43C) temperatures.

America’s national parks, particularly Death Valley, the Grand Canyon and Big Bend in Texas, sweltered, and saw several deaths suspected to be heat-related. At the Grand Canyon, QR codes were posted at trailheads linking to info on water and shelter. In Death Valley signs warned tourists not to hike after 10 a.m. Later in the summer, the same location was closed due to storm flooding.

DEATH VALLEY, CALIFORNIA - JULY 9: A sign says 'Extreme Heat Danger' is seen near the Red Canyon trail as 120 Fahrenheit (49 C) is expecting on weekend in Death Valley, California, United States on July 9, 2023. Death Valley, California, widely known as one of the hottest spots on the planet. (Photo by Tayfun Coskun/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)
Signs were posted in Death Valley urging tourists not to hike after 10 a.m. Tayfun Coskun/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images

As temperatures in parts of China soared to new records, extreme heat “tourism” saw visitors flocking to the country’s Flaming Mountains in far-western Xinjiang province to experience scorching temperatures emanating from red sandstone cliffs near Turpan.

Wearing hats and carrying umbrellas, tourists took selfies by a huge thermometer showing a surface temperature of 80 C (176 F), Chinese state television showed.

A world on fire

TENERIFE, CANARY ISLANDS - AUGUST 17: Neighbors of the town of Aguamansa try to cool off the surroundings of their homes before the threat of uncontrolled fire that goes down the slopes of the mountain as wildfire continues in Tenerife, Canary Islands on August 17, 2023. (Photo by Andres Gutierrez/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)
Wildfires broke out on Tenerife, among many other places this summer. Andres Gutierrez/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images

Inevitably, extreme heat led to extreme wildfires, with tourists and major destinations caught up in some of the worst outbreaks.

In July, blazes broke out in Portugal, Spain, Turkey and Greece, where wildfires ripped through Corfu, Evia and the outskirts of Athens.

The popular tourist island of Rhodes was most severely affected after a fire began in the centre of the island on July 18 and quickly spread to the east and south coasts, threatening beach resorts.

With flames approaching, many tourists and residents were evacuated to makeshift accommodation in sports halls, schools or public buildings on other parts of the island.

Nearly 20,000 people were evacuated by land and sea, some unable to retrieve passports and other personal effects. Airlines and tour companies cancelled flights and vacations while empty planes were sent to repatriate stranded tourists. Greece later offered free spring or fall 2024 vacations to those affected.

Lahaina, Maui, Thursday, August 11, 2023 - Buildings still smolder days after a wildfire gutted downtown Lahaina. (Robert Gauthier/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)
Maui’s historic Lahaina was devastated by fire. Robert Gauthier/Los Angeles Times/Getty Images

In August, Tenerife, one of Spain’s normally temperate Canary Islands suffered wildfires with more than 12,000 people forced to flee their homes. Fires broke out in Italy’s Sicily, Calabria, Abruzzo and Puglia regions causing evacuations from homes and hotels. Algeria, in north Africa, also suffered.

Meanwhile Canada has experienced what experts say was its worst wildfire season in history with more than 1,000 blazes since April. Thousands of people were evacuated across the Northwest Territories and British Columbia, where travel was restricted around the popular tourist destination of Kelowna.

The most devastating wildfire of the summer hit Lahaina, the historic town popular with tourists on the Hawaiian island of Maui, on August 8, leaving at least 115 people dead. Hawaii Governor Josh Green called itthe worst natural disaster in the state’s history.

Many of Lahaina’s historic and cultural landmarks were decimated by the blaze, including the Baldwin Home Museum – an 1830s-era house believed to be the oldest on Maui – the Lahaina Heritage Museum and the Wo Hing Museum.

There is hope that the sprawling 150-year-old Banyan tree – a popular focal point – may survive.

Storm forces

TOKYO, JAPAN - AUGUST 16: Tourists wait as the bullet train service has been suspended after Typhoon Lan triggers torrential rain in Shizuoka at Tokyo Station on August 16, 2023 in Tokyo, Japan. Over 70 people were injured as the typhoon hit across western Japan after making a landfall in Kushimoto, Wakayama. Torrential rain triggered by the typhoon in Shizuoka suspends the service of bullet train. (Photo by The Asahi Shimbun via Getty Images)
Japan’s high-speed rail services were disrupted by a typhoon. The Asahi Shimbun/Getty Images

After the fires came the storms, again wreaking havoc on travel while also causing widespread devastation.

Hurricane Hilary crashed into the US west coast in August bringing destructive rainfall and flooding.The desert city of Palm Springs received more rainfall in an hour than it normally does in a year. At the end of summer, Idalia lashed Florida and other southern states just as the Labor Day weekend approached.

Parts of Southeast Asia were battered by a number of severe typhoons as storm season hit hard. Typhoons Doksuri, Khanun and Lan came with record rainfall and hurricane-force winds, causing deaths, severe flooding, landslides and widespread power outages.

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Typhoon Khanun also lashed South Korea with deadly force and led to nearly 40,000 teenagers from 155 countries cutting short the World Scout Jamboree in Saemangeum, south of Seoul, when the threat of the approaching typhoon added to problems caused by the heatwave and conditions at the campsite.

When Typhoon Lan hit Japan’s southern Wakayama prefecture on August 15, super-fast bullet trains were heavily disrupted. Japan Airlines and All Nippon Airways also scrapped a host of flights.

In hot water

Islamorada, FloridaJuly 24, 2023At Alligator reed in the Florida Keys, elkhorn coral transplanted to the reef now appears bleached after days of high water temperatures. The coral at Alligator reef showed signs of bleaching that had not been present only a week earlier. (Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)
Rising sea temperature caused unprecedented mass bleaching on reefs around the Florida Keys. Carolyn Cole/Los Angeles Times/Getty Images

Another consequence of rising heat has been water temperatures also reaching  record highs.

While hot tub temperatures of 101.19 F (38.44 C), instead of the usual 80F, recorded on July 25 in Florida’s Manatee Bay might’ve made it uncomfortable for swimmers, they also caused unprecedented mass bleaching and threatened the extinction of coral species on reefs around the Florida Keys.

One report from the Coral Restoration Foundation found “100% coral mortality” at Sombrero Reef off the coast of Marathon in the Florida Keys.

“This is akin to all of the trees in the rainforest dying,” Keri O’Neil, the director and senior scientist at the Florida Aquarium, told CNN. “Where do all of the other animals that rely on the rainforest go to live? This is the underwater version of the trees in the rainforest disappearing. Corals serve that same fundamental role.”

Coral reefs generate billions of dollars for Florida’s economy through fishing and tourism and providing jobs.

And it wasn’t just Florida. The Mediterranean Sea reached a record high of 83.1F (28.4C) on July 24, according to the European Copernicus Climate Change Service (C3S). The previous record was 28.25C (82.85F) set in 2003.

Dirty water

People brave the rain on Westminster Bridge in London, Britain, on Aug. 2, 2023. A yellow alert for storms stretching from London to Manchester and covering much of the Midlands and Wales was issued by the Met Office on Wednesday. (Photo by Xinhua via Getty Images)
The UK spent much of the summer deluged by unseasonably cool and wet weather. Xinhua News Agency/Getty Images

In stark contrast to the searing heat in southern Europe, the UK endured a prolonged spell of mixed and wet weather in July and August, washing out many summer breaks and other sporting and cultural events in Britain. Temperatures only rose in early September when most people’s vacations were over.

Experts said the unseasonal weather was down to a blocked weather pattern caused by a kink in the jet stream, the wind that blows west to east high up in the atmosphere.

Perhaps an absence of beach weather was a good thing, with British beachgoers and watersports enthusiasts battling increasing issues with water quality because increased sewage dumping at sea is leaving many shorelines too toxic for swimmers.

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Flight chaos

A passenger airplane, operated by British Airways, takes off from London Heathrow Airport in London, UK, on Friday, March 31, 2023. British Airways is set to scrap 320 flights during the Easter week as security workers strike for 10-days over pay. Photographer: Chris Ratcliffe/Bloomberg
Strikes and air traffic control glitches have caused problems for Europe’s aviation network this summer. Bloomberg/Bloomberg/Bloomberg via Getty Images

While the frequently creaking US aviation infrastructure held it together over the summer, in Europe there were numerous disruptive events with strikes or threats of strikes by air traffic controllers, pilots or cabin crew leading to thousands of flights being scrapped.

In late August, an air traffic control glitch blamed on a single erroneous data point led to UK’s National Air Traffic Services restricting traffic, causing widespread delays and cancellations across the continent for days.

The UK has also been hit by an ongoing series of rail strikes in 2023, affecting travelers and commuters alike, while waits at UK international ferry terminals such as Dover have become longer than the pre-Brexit era because of extra time needed for passport control.

Overcrowding and overpricing

Tourits queue up to catch buses to leave the site and reach the parking lots at Le Mont-Saint-Michel, northwestern France, on July 25, 2023. (Photo by Damien MEYER / AFP) (Photo by DAMIEN MEYER/AFP via Getty Images)
France’s Mont St. Michel has been battling with tourist covercrowding. Damien Meyer/AFP/Getty Images

Despite the hazards and hitches across the globe, tourists were still travelling in droves, perhaps as a rebound from Covid lockdowns. In fact, in some places there were so many visitors that authorities felt the need to limit their numbers.

In France, sites such as the spectacular Mont Saint Michel, have been so overwhelmed there are campaigns to send tourists elsewhere or spread visits out over the year. Amsterdam launched an unusual “stay away campaign” in an attempt to curb visits from rowdy young Brits and, along with Venice, considered restrictions on cruise ships. On Japan’s sacred Mount Fuji, crowds were so bad tourists had to line up to reach the summit.

Venice, meanwhile, has announced a new 5 euro ($5.40) entry fee for daytrippers to cut numbers. And Greek officials say the number of daily visitors to the Acropolis will be limited from September to preserve the monument.

On the Spanish vacation island of Mallorca, a local protest group has claimed to be behind fake signs warning of jellyfish, falling rocks or long walks to reach a nearby beach, saying it’s using them to try to limit overcrowding.

Crowds of tourists have been an easy target for scammers in Italy, where visitors have faced rip-off charges for services like cutting a sandwich in half. Meanwhile many locals say their own country is too expensive for a vacation.

Source: CNN

 

 

 

 

 

 

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